DailyDirt: No More Urban Legends Of Waking Up In A Bathtub Without Your Kidneys...

from the urls-we-dig-up dept

There are plenty of ethical issues with organ transplants and how to handle the undersupply of donors. Hopefully, medical science is getting advanced enough to grow organs and eliminate the shortage of organs for patients who need them. Here are just a few stories about organs in modern medicine. After you've finished checking out those links, take a look at our Daily Deals for cool gadgets and other awesome stuff.
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Filed Under: appendix, cancer, gall bladder, health, kidneys, matchgrid, organ, organ transplant, regeneration, stem cells, stomach, ulcer


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  • identicon
    Pixelation, 20 Apr 2015 @ 6:16pm

    Hmmm, Menudo from a test tube...

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Rekrul, 21 Apr 2015 @ 4:47am

    Hopefully, medical science is getting advanced enough to grow organs and eliminate the shortage of organs for patients who need them.


    I predict that won't happen for at least another 50-100 years.

    After quite a few medical breakthroughs in the early part of the 20th century, medical science has stagnated by comparison. Sure, they've developed more effective treatments for some conditions and improved things like artificial limbs and joint replacement, but what major breakthroughs have there been in the last 50 years?

    I don't mean theoretical stuff that has seen limited trials and limited success, but stuff that has been proven effective and is now being used to save lives.

    Have cures for any major diseases been discovered in the last 50 years? Have they figured out how to prevent cancer or heart disease or diabetes? Where's the cure for AIDS?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      John Fenderson (profile), 21 Apr 2015 @ 3:46pm

      Re:

      "what major breakthroughs have there been in the last 50 years?"

      Seriously? There are far more than can be listed in a little comment. But here's one that is fresh in my mind because it was in my life recently.

      My mother had a stroke. She collapsed and was completely unresponsive (although she told me later that she was perfectly aware of her surroundings, she just couldn't move or speak.) Long story short, after three days of hospitalization, she's perfectly fine. Seriously, you would be completely unable to tell that she ever had a stroke.

      The reason she's perfectly fine is because of two specific medical breakthroughs that happened recently: a clot-busting drug, and the ability to remove large clots from deep parts of the brain. Quite literally, if she had had the stroke just 10 or 20 years ago, she would have been massively disabled now, if she survived at all.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Mason Wheeler (profile), 21 Apr 2015 @ 7:11am

    The sooner they get this stem cell research working to the point where cloned organs are a thing, the better. A friend of mine is blind in one eye due to a childhood accident, and she can't get a transplant because the required immunosuppression would probably end up killing her. Hopefully she'll live to see the day (no pun intended) when she can get a new eye grown from her own DNA.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Roger Strong (profile), 21 Apr 2015 @ 7:21am

    Organ theft is real! A friend of mine recently lost his Wurlitzer.

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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